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Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

Eiza Gonzalez

Mon, 31 Mar 2025

Description

Eiza González (Ash, Baby Driver, 3 Body Problem) is an actor and singer. Eiza joins the Armchair Expert to discuss whether there is human DNA in hotdogs, how she wanted braces because all the cool girls had them, and being a patriotic Mexican. Eiza and Dax talk about her father’s priority always being for her to learn as many languages as possible, why her dad passing away suddenly influenced her to pursue acting full time, and experiencing insecurity when she started working in America. Eiza explains why she rides so hard for those who first gave her a shot, seeing her new “Substance-in-space” horror film Ash in theaters, and how she learned the lesson that really horrific things can give way to the most beautiful, life-changing opportunities.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Audio
Transcription

Chapter 1: Who is Eiza Gonzalez and what are her notable works?

00:19 - 00:22 Dax Shepard

Today we have Aza Gonzalez-San.

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00:22 - 00:22 Monica Padman

Yes.

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00:23 - 00:36 Dax Shepard

Aza is an actor. She is a singer. Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare, Baby Driver, Three-Body Problem, Ambulance, Bloodshot, and a new movie out that I quite enjoyed.

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00:36 - 00:36 Monica Padman

Yeah.

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00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

Very moon-like, as I say in the episode, if anyone remembers that great Sam Rockwell movie called Ash.

00:00 - 00:00 Monica Padman

Yeah.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

Yes, Ash.

00:00 - 00:00 Monica Padman

Yeah, I just saw something about Ash on maybe Instagram. Some friends had seen it and they were raving about it. They were raving, yeah.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

It's an intense, it's got that, as I think I said in the episode, it's got that kind of substance-y, tenchy.

Chapter 2: Is there human DNA in hotdogs?

01:25 - 01:27 Monica Padman

She has bad news. I love bad news.

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01:27 - 01:34 Eiza Gonzalez

I have amazing, life-changing information for you. For me specifically? Yeah, this is what started it.

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01:34 - 01:38 Dax Shepard

Okay. I'm nervous. Don't tell me anything negative about hot dogs.

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01:38 - 01:42 Eiza Gonzalez

I fear it will be happening. Are you traumatized by this?

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00:00 - 00:00 Unknown Speaker

And this was the day that I stopped eating hot dogs. This is a good example of how if you care about something, you can twist it.

00:00 - 00:00 Monica Padman

Because, well, tell him the fact and then I'll tell you how I twisted it.

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

Yeah, because we were talking about your pictures and your paintings. Celebs on sandwiches. I said, wow, who would pick a hot dog as their favorite sandwich? Is that a sandwich? That's the big question. I used to be obsessed with hot dogs.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

What were your favorites before we ruin it?

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

Well, I'm not American, so I would just settle for a regular whatever.

Chapter 3: How did Eiza Gonzalez's father's death influence her career?

13:44 - 13:48 Eiza Gonzalez

It's interesting. So I went half my life to an American school.

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13:48 - 13:50 Dax Shepard

Does that just mean English school?

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13:50 - 14:12 Eiza Gonzalez

Yes. People that flew from America, all their kids were there. Or people that worked for the embassies and stuff like that. And then my other half of my education, I went to a British school. American meant it was full English all day long, no Spanish. So I had geography, math, chemistry, everything in English. So I was fully fluent in English since I was a baby.

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14:12 - 14:15 Eiza Gonzalez

I don't even remember learning another language.

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00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

And your parents put in that effort because they just wanted the whole world to be open to you. Did they specifically see you going to the U.S. ?

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

That was never thought. My dad had like fixation with languages. So he really was hyper focused on me speaking multiple languages. And I do. I was his only daughter and his only kid. My dad really didn't want any artistic sort of influence in my life in the sense of like music. And my mom was a naughty one who would take me to dance or singing.

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

And he was like, stop distracting her from 17 different languages.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

You went to Italy at 10 for a minute to learn Italian?

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

Yes. So my family lives in Italy.

Chapter 4: What challenges did Eiza face in her early career?

15:02 - 15:05 Eiza Gonzalez

But I should because I do know that I have a little bit of everything.

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15:05 - 15:09 Dax Shepard

Yeah. What do you think you have? Because mind you, what I thought I had didn't prove out in the data.

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15:09 - 15:16 Monica Padman

Have you done it? Yeah, we had to do it. And I'm 100% Indian. Pure. That is incredible. I'm so pure.

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15:16 - 15:27 Eiza Gonzalez

By the way, that's so funny to me because when I moved to the U.S., when I would ask people, where are you from? They'd be like, yeah, yeah, I'm American, Italian, Spanish, with a quarter Cherokee. And I was like, what?

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00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

Oh, God, yeah.

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

That is, with all due respect, such an American thing.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

Yeah, tell us. You guys don't do that in Mexico.

00:00 - 00:00 Eiza Gonzalez

I'd be like, I'm from Defe. You'd be like, I'm from Rome. Like, I've never in my life thought of this.

00:00 - 00:00 Dax Shepard

So I would be so wrong. I would have thought it would have been even perhaps more fetishized there because you have this mestizo population and then this European influence. And there has been some kind of status hierarchy, a little bit derived from that now.

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